Usually whenever the Lakers end their season without the Larry O’Brien trophy to hoist and a championship parade to host, a flurry of offseason moves ensue.

Yet, despite overseeing the Lakers (27-55) to their worst franchise record since moving to Los Angeles in 1960 with the NBA’s sixth-worst record, Mike D’Antoni’s coaching future might not be one of those changes.

“He’s under contract for two more years,” Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak said Friday at the Lakers’ facility in El Segundo. “If that changes, if there’s anything to share with you, we will.”

Although Kupchak said “there’s no timetable,” he and vice president of player personnel Jim Buss are expected to meet with D’Antoni within the next two weeks to discuss his future. D’Antoni has one more guaranteed season, followed by a team option for the 2015-16 season. D’Antoni’s future with the Lakers could also hinge on if they provide assurances they’ll exercise his team option to eliminate having lame-duck status next season.

“I’m going to do the best I can do. It’s not up to me to evaluate,” D’Antoni said. “I don’t hire and fire myself.”

The Lakers have leaned toward retaining D’Antoni. They owe him $4 million regardless of whether he coaches next season. The Lakers fear they would create further instability after having four coaches in the past five seasons.

The Lakers also missed a combined 319 games because of injuries. The most notable absences were Kobe Bryant (fractured left knee) and Steve Nash (nerve irritation in back), who played a combined 21 games. The team also fielded a flurry of role players on one-year deals unaccustomed to having such large responsibilities.

“Under the circumstances,” Kupchak said, “I’m not sure anybody could have done a better job than he did.”

That hasn’t quieted a mostly restless fan base.

“I know internally we didn’t canvas our 19,000 season-seat holders,” Kupchak said. “We care about what our fans think. We are going to try to get them something better and better every year. Sometimes that decision might not be what the fans want. But over the course of time, I think they’ve come to trust us that it will be the right decision.”

D’Antoni declined to publicly campaign for his job, other than repeating that his players received a “bad hand” and crediting his coaching staff for maintaining a positive attitude. He didn’t specificy where he could improve, citing injuries and personnel as reasons for the Lakers’ bottom-ranked defense. But D’Antoni defended his fast-paced system amid suspicion it contributed to the Lakers’ injuries.

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“It’s ludicrous. The pace of play and the way you spread the floor leads to less injuries because you don’t pound and hit,” said D’Antoni, whose teams in Phoenix and New York stayed relatively healthy. “If I’m to see scientific data that it’s not right, then obviously we’ll want to tweak something.

“Basketball’s changed, and it’s not the same basketball your father played,” D’Antoni continued, before adding he’s open toward “tweaking” his offense. “Teams that adapt to it quicker are going to be more successful.”

Bryant and Pau Gasol were among the most vocal critics, preferring a slower-paced offense predicated on post play.

“He’s going to do everything to win,” D’Antoni said of Bryant, who described his relationship as “professional.” “I’m competitive and I’ll do anything to win. Sometimes it does butt heads a little bit, but nothing out of the ordinary.”

Gasol admitted D’Antoni’s standing could influence his decision to re-sign here, but Kupchak said that won’t alter his decision.

“He might think he wants two bigs or five bigs,” D’Antoni said. “He had success different ways. But his stats and play show he can be effective in any system.”

D’Antoni added he feels “100 percent” confident the Lakers will rebuild quickly, while Kupchak said D’Antoni is “100 percent” corrrect on his system. Will that be enough for D’Antoni’s partnership with the Lakers to last?

“This has been a great job, great city, great fans and you understand the risk that you have with it,” D’Antoni said. “There’s no ‘woe is me.’ I’m looking forward to the next challenge, whatever that is, take some time to reflect and get your fire back up and then attack whatever the future holds.”